June 20265 min read

How to remove your content from Coomer

By 1Kyle8, OnlyFans creatorReviewed by Zander SmallUpdated June 2026

The short answer

To remove your content from Coomer, send a DMCA notice with the exact URLs and your copyright through whatever reporting mechanism the current domain offers, then go straight to Cloudflare and the host, since the operators are anonymous and slow. De-list the URLs from Google and Bing too, because Coomer moves domains (coomer.party, coomer.su, coomer.st) to dodge takedowns, and content resurfaces under the next address.

What Coomer is

Coomer is an importer and archive site that pulls paywalled content from OnlyFans, Fansly, and similar platforms and republishes it so anyone can browse without paying the creator. It is run by the same operation behind Kemono, which does the same thing for Patreon-style sites. There is no named company and no public point of contact beyond a DMCA mechanism. The site has deliberately hopped domains, from coomer.party to coomer.su to coomer.st, choosing extensions that sit outside the regulatory frameworks that make takedowns easier. That domain-hopping is the whole game here.

Step-by-step: removing your content from Coomer

  1. Confirm the live domain and list every URL. Coomer migrates addresses on purpose, so first check which domain is actually live right now with a WHOIS/host lookup, then record the exact pages showing your content. Each URL is filed separately.
  2. Use Coomer's DMCA mechanism, but expect little. The current domain may carry a DMCA reporting method. Submit there, but treat it as one channel among several, because the operators are anonymous and removal is often slow or ignored.
  3. Go to Cloudflare and the host. Coomer uses Cloudflare for its CDN and DDoS protection, which masks the origin host. File through Cloudflare's abuse process to surface the real host, then send the host and the domain registrar their own notices. Registrars and hosts have suspended Coomer before, which is what keeps forcing it to move.
  4. Send a § 512-compliant notice. Include your copyrighted work, the infringing URLs, a good-faith statement, the under-penalty-of-perjury statement, your contact, and a signature. This can become a public record, so file under a name you are comfortable having on file, or have a service file under its name to keep your real identity private.
  5. De-list from search in parallel. Submit the URLs to Google's and Bing's copyright removal forms. This step matters more on Coomer than on most sites, because when the content reappears under a new domain it is search that re-surfaces it to viewers.
  6. Re-file when it resurfaces under a new domain. A removal that holds on coomer.su means nothing once content reappears on coomer.st. Monitor the domain moves and re-send against each new address.

Why Coomer is hard to remove from

Coomer is built to survive takedowns. The operators are anonymous, the site leans on Cloudflare to hide its host, and it deliberately picks domains on extensions that sit outside the usual enforcement reach. When a registrar or host does act, the response is to migrate to the next domain rather than to comply. So a single notice, even a successful one, tends to clear one address while the same library comes back under another. Doing this by hand means re-running the host hunt and the filing every time it moves.

Let Fanlock handle Coomer for you

We track Coomer across its domain moves and file under Fanlock's name, so your identity never lands in a public takedown record. We file through Cloudflare to reach the origin host, push the host and registrar, and re-file against each new address when the site migrates from one domain to the next. We de-list the pages from Google, Bing, and Yahoo, which is the step that actually keeps Coomer from re-surfacing to viewers after it moves. The source channels that feed importer sites like Coomer are exactly what we monitor. Pirate-Intent Search puts us on the same trail the pirates use, searching Google the way they do, so a Coomer copy under any new domain turns up to us right when it appears. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, which you can confirm yourself in Google's public Transparency Report.

FAQ

Is it legal to remove my content from Coomer?

Yes. You own the copyright to your content the moment you create it, even when it sat behind a paywall, which gives you the right to demand removal of unauthorized copies under the DMCA. You do not need a registered copyright to file.

Does Coomer have a working DMCA process?

Coomer usually offers some DMCA reporting mechanism on its live domain, but the operators are anonymous and notices are often slow or ignored. The more reliable path is to file with Cloudflare and the host, push the registrar, and de-list from search at the same time.

Why does Coomer keep changing domains, from coomer.party to coomer.su?

To dodge enforcement. When registrars or hosts suspend the site after DMCA pressure, the operators migrate to a new domain on an extension chosen for looser oversight. That is why removing content from one Coomer domain does not keep it gone, and why search de-listing matters.

Is Coomer the same as Kemono?

They are run by the same operation. Coomer imports adult subscription content while Kemono targets Patreon-style platforms. If your work has been imported to one, it is worth checking the other.

What if Coomer re-uploads my content after removal?

Expect it, usually under a new domain. The fix is monitoring the domain moves plus re-filing against each address, combined with search de-listing so the new copy does not surface to viewers.

See if your content is on Coomer right now

Run a free scan with just your username and we will show you where you are exposed, across Coomer's domains and everywhere else, then handle the removals for you. No card, no selfie until you have seen what we found. Plans start at $49/mo.

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Fanlock removes your content from Coomer automatically

You don't have to do any of this by hand. Sign up and Fanlock finds your content on Coomer (and across search, social, and Telegram), files the takedowns under our name so your identity stays private, and re-files automatically when it reappears. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, verifiable in Google's public Transparency Report.

Start Free Scan
1Kyle8

About 1Kyle8

OnlyFans creator

1Kyle8 is an OnlyFans creator who removed her own leaks with Fanlock. She writes these removal guides from experience; the technical and legal steps are reviewed by Zander Small, Fanlock co-founder. More about the Fanlock team →